To the average comic book reader of the early 1960s, Gold Key
seemed to burst on the scene from nowhere. But in reality, it was
just a new imprint of a company that had been an important,
behind-the-scenes part of the comic book industry since the very
beginning.
Gold Key's parent company, Western Printing and Lithographing
Co., was the publishing arm of Kay Kamen, a prominent figure in the
history of character licensing, who had been the first to license
the cartoon characters of Walt Disney
— among others — for use in other media. From 1938-62,
Western contracted with Dell Comics to
produce its comic books. In 1962, the arrangement came to an end,
and Western launched Gold Key to perform that function.
The majority of Dell's licensed titles — which by that
time included not just the Disneys, but also the characters of
Warner Bros., Walter Lantz, Hanna-Barbera, and many others, plus a wide
variety of TV shows, newspaper strips, etc. — were not the
only ones included in the Gold Key launch. There were also
properties Western had not licensed previously, such as
The Phantom and those of puppet
animator Gerry Anderson, and original titles, such as Magnus, Doctor
Solar and Space Family
Robinson. (The latter, in fact, did the licensing routine
in reverse, becoming the basis for television's Lost in
Space.)
Gold Key continued to license new properties, such as those of
the DePatie-Freleng studio and new movies and TV shows, and to
produce its own original works, such as Wacky Witch and Baby Snoots, for the rest of the 1960s and
'70s. By the late 1970s, however, comic book sales in general were
down, and Gold Key, which had started out with sales in the
millions, felt the crunch particularly badly. Exacerbating the
situation was the fact that other publishers were compensating for
sales shortfalls with revenue from licensing their characters
— but Gold Key was mostly a licensee, not a licensor, and
therefore couldn't tap this resource.
In the late '70s, they experimented with pulling their comics
off of newsstands and distributing them through toy stores and
other non-traditional outlets, in bags of three comics each; but
this was a dismal failure. In 1981, Western dropped the Gold Key
logo and put the comics under the Whitman imprint, which had long
been used for coloring books, Big Little
Books, and some comics. Eventually, they started doing what had
once been unthinkable — voluntarily letting some of the
licenses lapse. By 1984, they were completely out of the comic book
business.
Today, the Warner and Hanna-Barbera comics are published by
DC Comics, with which the companies now have
corporate ties. The Disneys go through Gemstone Publishing, which
exists largely just to publish them. Most of the others have
completely disappeared from American comic books.
— DDM
Gold Key Comics articles in Don Markstein's
Toonopedia™:
• 101 Dalmatians •
The Addams Family • Alice in Wonderland • The Amazing Chan and the Chan Clan •
Andy Panda • Atom Ant • Augie Doggie
and Doggie Daddy • Autocat and
Motormouse • Baby Snoots •
Bambi • Carl
Barks • Barney Google •
Beetle Bailey • Believe It or Not • The Big Bad Wolf • Birdman • Bongo
Bear • Brer Rabbit •
Brothers of the Spear • Buck Rogers • Bugs
Bunny • Bullwinkle •
The Cattanooga Cats • Cave Kids • Chip'n'Dale • Cinderella • The
Close Shaves of Pauline Peril • Daffy
Duck • Dagar the Invincible
• Dastardly & Muttley in Their
Flying Machines • Dell Comics
• Deputy Dawg • Dewey, Huey and Louie • Dick Dastardly • Dinky
Duck • Dino Boy •
Doctor Solar, Man of the Atom •
Doctor Spektor • Donald Duck • Donald
Duck's nephews • Dopey •
Dumbo • Elmer
Fudd • Fat Albert and the Cosby
Kids • Fearless Fly •
Flash Gordon • The Flintstones • Fractured Fairy Tales • Frankenstein Jr. • The Funky Phantom • The Galaxy Trio • Gay
Purr-ee • George of the Jungle
• Gladstone Gander •
Goofy • Grandma Duck • Gyro
Gearloose • Hanna-Barbera
Studio • The Harlem
Globetrotters • Hashimoto-San
• Heckle and Jeckle •
Hector Heathcote • The Herculoids • Hokey
Wolf • Huey, Dewey and Louie
• Huckleberry Hound • The Impossibles • Inch High, Private Eye • The Inspector • Jay
Ward Productions • The Jetsons
• Jonny Quest • The Jungle Book • The Jungle Twins • The Junior Woodchucks • King Leonardo and His Short Subjects •
Lady and the Tramp • Li'l Bad Wolf • Little
Lulu • The Little Monsters
• Looney Tunes • Lost in Space • Louie, Huey and Dewey • Magilla Gorilla • Magnus, Robot Fighter, 4000 AD • M.A.R.S. Patrol • MGM
cartoons • Mickey Mouse •
The Mighty Hercules • The Mighty Mightor • Mighty Mouse • Mighty Samson • Milton the Monster • Moby Dick • Moby
Duck • Mr. and Mrs. J. Evil
Scientist • Mushmouse and Punkin
Puss • The Minute and a Half
Man • Motormouse and Autocat
• The Occult Files of Doctor
Spektor • O.G. Wotasnozzle
• 101 Dalmatians • Oona Goosepimple • The
Owl • Pauline Peril •
Peanuts • Penelope Pitstop • The Perils of Penelope Pitstop • Peter Pan • Peter
Potamus • The Phantom •
The Pink Panther • Pinocchio • Pixie
and Dixie • Pluto •
Pooh • Popeye the
Sailor • Porky Pig •
Punkin' Puss and Mushmouse •
Quick Draw McGraw • Raggedy Ann and Andy • The Reluctant Dragon • Ricochet Rabbit • Ripley's Believe It or Not • Road Runner • Rocky
and Bullwinkle • The Roman
Holidays • Samson and Goliath
• Scamp • Scooby-Doo • Scrooge
McDuck • Secret Squirrel
• Shazzan • Sleeping Beauty • Snagglepuss • Snooper and Blabber • Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs • Snuffy Smith • Song of
the South • Space Family
Robinson • Space Kidettes
• Space Ghost • Space Mouse • Speed
Buggy • Super Goof •
The Sword in the Stone • Sylvester Pussycat • Tarzan • Tasmanian
Devil • Terrytoons •
Tiger Girl • Tom and Jerry • Tom
Slick • Tono and Kono, the Jungle
Twins • Tooter Turtle •
Top Cat • Total War • Tragg and
the Sky Gods • Turok, Son of
Stone • Tweety Bird •
Uncle Remus • Uncle Scrooge • Underdog • Universal Studios Cartoons • Wacky Races • Wacky
Witch • The Walt Disney Company
• Walter Lantz Studio •
Warner Bros. Cartoons • Where's Huddles? • Wile E. Coyote • Winnie
the Pooh • Woodsy Owl •
Woody Woodpecker • Yakky Doodle • Yellow
Submarine • Yosemite Sam
• Yogi Bear • Young Samson
Gold Key Comics articles in Don Markstein's ToonopediaTM
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